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Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind...

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Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.
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Page 1: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Embouchurethe way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Page 2: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Visual, Auditory, Verbal From this lesson you should be able to:

Visually see when you or someone else is producing a correct embouchure.

Hear whether a you or someone else is producing a proper tone with correct embouchure.

Verbally correct yourself or others in embouchure formation.

Page 3: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Facilitation not Magician Embouchure concepts will not magically

be fixed. You have the responsibility to correct

yourself and others in the production of embouchure and sound.

From these non negotiable concepts, we should be able to teach alter and refine embouchure and tone. It is a continuous process, that’s why it is facilitation and not magic.

Page 4: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Flute Pick up your head joint only. Your bottom

lip should cover ¼-1/3 of the tone hole. Take time to correct the person next to you by moving up and down as necessary to achieve the feeling.

Page 5: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Flute con’t “Buzz” words-

“Whee” “Too”

With your own facial expression make a silent “Whee”. This pulls the corners of the lips outward and flattens the lower lip which is resting on/over the tone hole.

Add “Too” following the “Whee” WHEE-TOO should 1) set the embouchure and 2)

give the feeling of properly starting the first tone.

Page 6: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

The Not So First Tone Air should be directed INTO the tone hole, NOT

ACROSS it. The more directly the air goes into the hole, the more likely a clear pleasing sound will result. Think of your airstream pointing directly down into

the backwall of the tone hole. The “Buzz” word for this is “FOCUS” This “Focus” air creates the best possible tone.

The tone that the flute makes with a proper embouchure should be an in tune A2. If it is flat roll out, sharp roll in. This covers or uncovers the tone hole a little more properly.

Page 7: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Oboe Imitating an English accent, say, “No oboe,”

bringing the corners of the mouth firm and forward, against the teeth. The jaw will be separated, the chin down and firm, the tongue down. The syllables “oh” and “oo” are helpful in making a resonant relaxed acoustical chamber.

Think of your lips as a firm springy cushion. Avoid the tight-lipped “E” configuration which produces a thin tone and high pitch.

Page 8: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Crowing the Reed Lay the tip of the reed at the line on the bottom lip, the

part that distinguishes wet and dry areas. Gently roll the bottom lip in so that the reed barely extends into the mouth. The top lip should cushion and seal the reed from above. Thinking “No Oboe” provides some resistance, to set the reed into vibration once the breath is activated and will also help discourage the reed from slipping into the mouth more than 1/16 to 1/8th of an inch. Keeping the reed anchored firmly on the bottom lip, inhale deeply and blow into the reed. Articulate with a soft “D” consonant helps with initial crows.

A proper crow should sound two C’s an octave apart.

Page 9: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Clarinet Embouchure Using your facial expression and voice, form an

exaggerated, facial ‘A’ sound. The muscles which control the chin and lower lip must visibly move. The lower lip plus the muscles and tissue covering the chin becoming VERY FLAT. To be certain that a facial ‘A’ is formed, think of showing a deaf person the letter ‘A’ with your facial muscles. Or imagine that you are putting chapstick on your lower lip. Run your finger over your lip as if it were a tube of chapstick. Your partner should see that your chin is flat because of this.

Page 10: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Clarinet Embouchure Con’t Maintaining the facial ‘A’, add a facial

‘Q’ on top of it. (moreso we are interested in the oo sound.) this instantly brings your facial muscles which surround the lips and completes the formation of a great clarinet embouchure.

Page 11: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

The Not so First Tone Using the reed, ligature, mouthpiece

and barrel. The reed should rest on the lower lip,

while the upper teeth contact the mouthpiece. Take about a half an inch of reed into the mouth. Head up level and mouthpiece barrel

towards the body. The correct sound with just mouthpiece and

barrel should produce a top line concert F#

Page 12: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Saxophone Embouchure Place the upper teeth on the

mouthpiece. Think an exaggerated “A” to firm up lips

to the teeth. Add “Q” which brings in the corners of

the lips and results in even pressure of lips from top, bottom, and sides. (notice how similar to clarinet this is, oh

wait, it’s the same!)

Page 13: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Saxophone Embouchure con’t HERE IS THE DIFFERENCE FROM CLARINET… While

air is directed at the reed with clarinet it is more parallel to the neck pipe of the instrument into the mouthpiece.

Any uneven lip or facial tension will cause distorted tones. Tones will be thin if embouchure is too tight and tone will be a duck-quack if the embouchure is too loose. Lower the teeth biting into lower lip will result in the bunched chin, a sore lip and thin tone. Keep lip pressure even and the lower lip controls comes from jaw strength, not from bite of the teeth.

Page 14: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Trumpet Embouchure Brass instruments as opposed to woodwind

instruments must remember that they have to create their own vibrations. This is meant to be completely natural and unrestricted.

Practice a sigh breath without any hissing sound. This means that the throat is too closed. If this happens look up and yawn.

Say “HO” under your breath when exhaling from the sigh.

Page 15: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Trumpet Embouchure Say the word “banana” (focusing in on the

consonant “B” the syllable “buh” is what we are most interested in.) The “B” is the most important in the initial

formation of the embouchure. Form the “B” without saying “Banana”. If you do

this properly, the lips will be together naturally—not tight, not limp, but very supple. You will have your own facial characteristics, and you will look different. DO NOT MAKE FACES!

Then you must sigh through the “B”

Page 16: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Trumpet Embouchure Con’tFailure of trumpet players- Playing with a mouthpiece that is dry or dry lips. The lips should also be centered inside of the mouthpiece. Trumpet is a “straight down the pipe” instrument.

Page 17: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Horn Embouchure Much like trumpet, however, to set the

lips use the syllables “Dim” or “Em”. Saying it several times, vigorously or even angrily, gives a good feeling for “set” of lip corners and placement of teeth. (there should be enough room to fit the tip of your tongue between your teeth)

Page 18: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Horn Embouchure Con’t The low register of the horn requires that a

2/3 to 1/3 ratio of upper to lower lip within the mouthpiece be used.

A common problem of horn players is that they habitually use too little upper lip.

Once you are buzzing freely with the mouthpiece only then work with flexing the lower jaw. Think of a “chewing” motion. This should give you a siren sound on the buzz.

Page 19: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Horn Con’t Syllables are important with the horn,

always remember for the upper register use an “ee”, middle an “oh”, and lower an “aw”.

The lower jaw should pivot up and inward, or down and outward.

Page 20: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Horn Con’t Setting of the mouthpiece rim above the

lip-line on upper lip, thereby making effective use of the underlying muscle.

A downward, rather then horizontal, angle to the lead pipe, thereby allowing free vibration of the upper lip.

A flexible lower jaw, thereby establishing the basis for easy register shifts and oral cavity adjustment.

Page 21: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Trombone/Baritone Embouchure The corners of the mouth are firmed exactly

where they are on an expressionless face. The degree of firmness should benot unlike that of a warm, friendly handshake. Neither the limpness of the “dead fish” nor the tightness of the “hungry tiger” handshakes is appropriate. The corners of the mouth do not move nor should the degree of tension change from one register to another.

Page 22: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Trombone/Bariton Con‘t The mouthpiece should be centered on the lip and

placed approximately one half on the lower and one half on the upper lip. Many low brass players place slightly more upper lip in the mouthpiece. Problems in range can result from extreme vertical placement.

Mouthpiece pressure on the lip should not exceed an amount necessary to establish the area that will do the vibrating. Excess pressure will result in reduced range and endurance. Another result will be strained, edgy tone quality and an aperture in the embouchure that is too open, thus requiring even more pressure to reach the upper range.

Page 23: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Trombone/Baritone Con’t Tone quality of a low brass instrument is

similar to singing a rich letter “O”. The throat is open in an “O” consonant and the embouchure buzzes the “song” in an efficient, resonant manner. Once good tone as been produced it can easily be reproduced.

Page 24: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Tuba Embouchure There are two concepts that all tuba

players must grasp. Breathing Tongue placement

Relax the Stomach and diaphragm muscle and blow a large quantity of air onto your hand. Very little diaphragm support is needed for tuba, quantity of air is more important.

Page 25: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Tuba Con’t Tongue placement is a culprit which prevents the

process of breath from being efficient. Say the Vowel sound “Oh” and notice the position

of the tongue. The production of the “OH” sound causes the tongue to lay down flat in the botom of the mouth, thereby causing no obstruction to the air stream. This is the ideal placement of the tongue for ALL RANGES in tuba playing. The “AH” sound will also cause the tongue to rest in the correct position, but if exaggerated, gagging results. “OH” is always preferable.

Page 26: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Tuba Con’t Place the ring of the visualizer or mouthpiece on

the lips and say “OH” and then gradually change to an “OO” sound. This forms the lips into the correct position.

Grasp a small tube or pen in the center of the lips. This causes the lips to tighten toward a central point and will also bring the corners of the mouth to a firm set.

Remember “OO-OH-Squeeze the tube with the lips” Once you have gone through this procedure carefully, the student is ready to make the first sound.

Page 27: Embouchure the way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.

Tuba Con’t Ideally the mouthpiece placement

should be 2/3 on the top lip and 1/3 on the bottom lip.


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